Rocket League Developer Peryonix announced on Thursday that its game-of-football game will no longer support Mac and Linux players from March 2020. For players in those stadiums, Psionix will launch a program last March to disable everything online – including the game.
To the announcement was sent to Steam, Psionix said, "As we continue to improve Rocket League With the new technology, it no longer works for us to maintain support for macOS and Linux (SteamOS) platforms. As a result, the final slogan for MacOS and Linux versions will be in March. ”
When renewal is shocked Rocket League in March, the game will only be played while running on a Windows 7 machine or new. For Mac players, Pilyonix recommends – but does not officially support – use it Apple Boot Camp Windows computer imitation tool. For Linux players, it recommends the same process as Proton app
Psionix has announced a complete list of offline version of Rocket League by using its own support center:
- Similarity of Place
- Split-Play Screen
- Gallery / Inventory (Your existing items will not be removed from your list)
- Functional Statistics
- Instead
- Steam Works Maps (to be downloaded before final placement)
- Custom tutorial packs (Must be downloaded before final pack)
The studio also announced the online items the game will lose after the final credit:
- Online Matchmaking
- Private Match
- Contests
- Rocket Pass
- Goods Store / Esports Shop
- Game Events
- List of friends
- Clubs
- News Panel
- New Cultural Training Packages
- Maps for the new workshop
- Leaderboards
- League positions
Rocket League currently available (and supported) on six platforms: Linux, Mac, Nintendo Switch, PlayStation 4, Windows PC, and Xbox One. If you're a Linux or Mac fan, you might want to download Steam Workhop Maps and Custom Training Packs before the platform support drops to four.